Approaching the first stream crossing on the Yerba Canyon Trail near Taos Ski Valley, the sound of the water grows louder. A breeze ruffles the still-green trees. Purple asters and
Larry Littlefield
TUCSON (KVOA) - A 65-year-old vulnerable adult is sought by Pima County Sheriff s Department after he was reported missing from the far westside of Tucson Wednesday morning.
According PCSD, 64-year-old Larry Littlefield was last seen at around 11 a.m. Wednesday near the 5500 block of West Lazy South Street near Kinney and Bopp roads.
The department said he is believed to be traveling on foot.
Littlefield was described to be five feet, four inches tall and weigh about 165 pounds. He was said to have hazel eyes and brown hair.
He was last seen wearing a white shirt, blue shorts with a white stripe and white socks.
Car drivers in the New York metropolitan area have more exclusive room to roam than do their counterparts in any other area of the country. That’s because, as the cartogram above shows, our metropolitan area contains the nation’s most extensive limited-access expressway system (shown in purple) roads that are restricted to passenger cars only.
No trucks, buses, or commercial and service vehicles allowed.
As a result, the extent of New York’s passenger-car-only expressways far outstrip the networks of car-only roads in any other metro area, almost all of which have none, according to policy wonk (and frequent Streetsblog commenter) Larry Littlefield, who commissioned the cartogram from the Pittsburgh-based firm 4CGeoworks. Metro Washington, D.C., has an expressway network limited to passenger cars but it’s not even close to the extent of ours.